Gaele Hi
Cherico, Mississippi is the setting for this lovely series centering around the newly built public library and it’s director Maura Beth. While not having read the earlier books in this series, I was easily able to dive into this story and meet the characters as they shared their story and changes to come with us all. Maura Beth and her English teacher husband are expecting their first child – but they aren’t alone. Her sister in law Elise, visiting Cherico while on sabbatical from her professorship in a nearby university, is also pregnant, as well as a friend from town, Periwinkle, the owner of the Twinkle Café. Instantly, above and beyond a friendship, these women have something in common, and Maura Beth, with her knack of bringing together people to support, uphold and befriend one another has a brainstorm. A support group to share concerns, get information and generally spend their pregnancy together. A wonderful idea that is wholeheartedly supported by all the community – already close knit and supportive from their time spent together in the Cherry Cola Book Clun – that provided care, prayers, concern and community through deaths, health scares, marriages and the monumental and not so moments of life. Quickly Ashton Lee sucked me into the series – from Jeremy’s ‘pregnancy mirroring’ to Elise’s utter fish out of water utterances, even in supporting Peri and her issues with her mother’s racist views of her husband and her child: the story was full of moments that every group of friends have: ups, downs and just being and existing in the same space. Wonderfully able to address real issues of acceptance, fears, health and even family strife – the story managed to provide a great escape sort of read that kept brining moments of “oh I remember that” or “oh I wish I had” – easily accessible to readers everywhere in every phase of life. Adding to the wonderful characters and ideas brought forward, lovely little bits of literary and wordplay entered the story – hard to miss with a librarian and an English teacher, and when you add a budding romance for Jeremy’s friend Alex, a history teacher, and his affection for the uber-feminist Elise, the sweetness of the story amps up a few more notches. As the conclusion to the series, it was lovely – bringing a sense of closure to this moment, leaving a few questions unanswered, and providing the new generation of members for this book club and community. I received an eArc copy of the title from the publisher via NetGalley for purpose of honest review. I was not compensated for this review: all conclusions are my own responsibility.